Interesting. I hadn’t heard that before. You would think that the reputation of a typical Dead concert would have received enough general notice that the strictly Top 40 crowd might have known it would be an experience they might not be prepared for, but I guess not.
Prime example: Rush. They’ve been around for 40 years, and these days they put on a 3-hour show, but how many “hits” can the average non-hardcore fan name? “Tom Sawyer”? Maybe “YYZ”? On the outside, “Closer to the Heart”? Yet they still sell out venues everywhere they play.
I hate Rush but can name more songs than that*, I think a lot of people would be surprised at how many songs they know by artists that have been around for that long. Back around 1999, I got dragged along to a Tom Petty concert. I didn’t want to go, didn’t think I’d know any songs, didn’t really care that much for him. It ended up being one of the best concerts I’d ever been to. Considering I didn’t think I really knew anything by him other then one or two songs, I think out of the two and half hour set, I didn’t know maybe two songs. He has a ton of hit songs.
*Okay, Rush, I effin hate Rush and will turn it off if it comes on, but just off the top of my head: Tom Sawyer, YYZ (just from seeing people do the bass solo on youtube), Working Man, Fly By Night, Limelight, The Spirit Of The Radio. That’s all I got, but I think that’s pretty good for someone that’s been actively avoiding them.
Sounds about right to me. Those were the usual classic rock station Rush songs, except for YYZ. The only reason I know that one is from Guitar Hero. And then there’s that awful Trees song, which I know only from Rock Band (or a Guitar Hero–one of those games.) I actually don’t mind Rush, but the lyrics to that one drive me nuts.
I would think they’d have to be - I sure as heck wouldn’t shell out for a concert if all I knew about The Rembrandts was that they made “I’ll Be There For You.” The lone hit is what gets you to listen to other tracks, and liking those (a lot) is what gets you to a concert.
There’s also The Pass, New World Man (it was recognized in the mid-80s), the Mission, and Subdivisions; they at least got semi–regular airtime when the contemporaneous album was out.
So, what’s the total something like 10-12?
Just listened to them, and none of those are really registering with me. Subdivisions and New World Man vaguely sound familiar, but Subdivisions kind of sounds like a pretty typical/generic Rush song to me, so I may just be recognizing that. Mind you, the Rush songs I’m familiar with are the ones that got airplay on classic rock stations in the early to mid-90s onward, not stations playing contemporaneous rock, so maybe that’s it.
Huh. For some reason, I thought the Church had another hit in the US with “Almost With You,” (one of my all-time favorite songs) but apparently that didn’t chart at all (or maybe it wasn’t released as a single here, I don’t know.) “Metropolis” apparently did well on the modern rock and mainstream rock charts, but never crossed into the Hot 100. So yeah, one of those “One Hit Wonder” bands that really don’t deserve to be known as one-hit wonders (much like Dexy’s Midnight Runners, Gary Numan, Devo, the Verve, etc.)
The point is that every band* has performed full-length shows for years before getting a record deal. They easily have enough material for 45 minutes, even if most of it isn’t familiar to those who just listen to hit singles.
*Well, maybe not manufactured groups like boy bands
I never considered The Church one-hit-wonders but I guess “Under The Milky Way” is actually the only song they’re know for in the US. Great band. I still have a Starfish T-shirt.
My contribution to this thread is Marcy Playground. “Sex and Candy” was a big hit and the only song anyone remembers. “Sex and Candy” was maybe the 8th or 9th best song on that album. Their next record, Shapeshifter was just as good or better than the debut. The next two albums weren’t as strong but still had quality material. “Sex and Candy” is probably about the 30th best song Marcy Plaground recorded, IMO. Marcy Playround still tours and singer John Wozniak has also released solo material.
I went to a Troggs concert and they played Wild Thing at least twice, plus a bunch of unmemorable stuff. I think everyone was there just to see them do Wild Thing.
Their only American Top 40 hit was “New World Man”.
I’ve heard they no longer play “Closer to the Heart” live.
There’s also “The Spirit of Radio”, “Working Man”, “Fly By Night”, and of course “A Passage to Bangkok” which I’ve never seen live (4 concerts between 1982 and 1994).
I think it’s worth noting that they had 43 singles on the top 40 of The Mainstream Rock charts. I admit the top 40 there isn’t much of a hit (most notable rock bands will probably make that with every single, as long as programmers still give them play). Tightening the requirements some, they still have 21 top 10 singles on that chart. Looking at their singles I discography I count at least 10 songs that I have heard at least semi-regularly on classic rock radio over the past 20 or so years. Without getting too much into Billboard chart methodology, for a considerable period of time many hit singles were not eligible for the main charts if they did not have a physical commercial single release. So a lot of rock album hits did not appear on the main charts like the Hot 100/Top 40. Though this doesn’t apply to Rush and most rock bands of their era, there were many no-doubt (including at least one huge one from “no Doubt”) pop hits of the 90s that did not chart on the Hot 100 during the transition period when singles weren’t released in order to drive CD sales and before legal digital singles.
I could turn on the current “mainstream rock” format station on any given day and hear “Tom Sawyer, Subdivisions, Limelight, Closer to the Heart, The Spirit of Radio, and Fly By Night.” Heck, “Freewill” has been huge on rock radio anywhere I have lived in the last 20 years (US- East Coast, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest) and I don’t think it charted on any airplay chart.
Someone made me go to this concert once, they played this one song for like an hour, then they took a break for like 30 seconds, and then proceeded to play that same song all over again for another hour…and then AGAIN…I said to the girl,“WTF is this shit?”
I don’t think the Beatles, after Beatlemania hit, ever played a set that was more than 30 minutes long in their career. Why bother, when no one can hear the music over the screaming. I think I read in one of the books on the Beatles (I think it was this one), that their playlist never varied much over the years, either.